>er 23,19Sj by, n iung womaj V'orthinglof ped office, igton pacec peeking in. ' d told tli( opened \k lown up, iduded Ok id her hus- nds, the two infants, a Is at Inter- 'are, whicli 't release th She and her a being treat. ■ 1HC hospi- booked into Jail pending ed murder, nal machinf - and eight kidnapping, stormed the ' ntly looking he said hai e two years ssion. ic hostages, ear-old nurse ey outside, ruggle ora to get awai oting" Roth 3ell, oneola iators. ?y witnesses Roth appar- he gun frorc ed the rest o; ? third-floor artis. from Page l ly. i opposition ind the New ed to cooper- but say that ill ultimate!! ant's plan. accords fil er failing k of all 10 ol Quebec Pre- ssa said he icipate inin- igs, and his i law calling sovereignti 1992. ■ seems to be t recent polls of Quebeds ndence from Id like some ■association" from Pagel rnfirmed the K.L. Peddi- of engineer- -ector of the Experiment t's appoint- duty chancel- ersity System is was Pera; ment as vice micationsfa from Page! liversity life nidation, ha- I safety. The ority of the ps of Cadets communiti ngement o« ?d that the 1 the Univer- iropriate ana ■ action once ns have beet EAST disease, VIP larch study, 00.00 will be ch study of j complets O BLOOD Sports Monday, September 23,1991 ~ The Battalion ~~ Page 7 Scoreboard NFL Dallas 17 Phoenix 9 Houston 20 New England 24 Green Bay 13 Miami 16 L.A. Raiders 17 Atlanta 21 Cincinnati 27 Washington 34 Minnesota O New Orleans 26 Detroit 33 Indianapolis 24 Philadelphia 23 Pittsburgh 14 Cleveland 10 N.Y. Giants .....13 L.A. Rams 10 San Francisco 27 Buffalo 17 Tampa Bay 10 Denver 27 San Diego 19 Kansas City 20 Seattle 13 swc Houston 10 Illinois 51 Auburn .14 Texas 10 Missouri 21 Baylor 47 TCU 24 Oklahoma St 21 Life in the fast lane . . Speedway brings auto racing back to Brazos Valley By Richard S. James The Battalion Bill Venturini predicited that Sun day's Texas ARCA 500k would be his first win of the season, and he fought back from early problems and pit lane penalties to win by 27 seconds over Bob Keselowski and take the lead in the Per- matex Supercar Series driver's champi onship. Venturini, from Chicago, won the first stock car race at Texas World Speed way since Benny Parsons won a NASCAR event at the two-mile super speedway in 1981. The track closed in 1988 before being bought by the Ishin Corporation and undergoing a complete renovation. Venturini was the fastest qualifier, setting a track record of 180.533 mph. But he started in twenty-first position be cause he qualified on Saturday. Clay Young of Smyrna, GA qualified his Kent Rentals Pontiac fastest on Fri day to claim the pole position. The top twenty qualifiers on Friday are automati cally locked into those starting positions. Venturini's Friday qualifying run was fouled by an ignition problem. Third qualifier Jeff Purvis pulled out a good lead after passing Ben Hess on lap four before the first yellow came out on lap 21 for oil on the track. Purvis dropped out of the race after the restart with a blown engine. Venturi ni had worked his Nestea Plunge See First race/ Page 9 KARL STOLLEIS/ The Battalion Bill Venturini gives the thumbs up to his crew chief after winning the an all-time ARCA (Automobile Racing Club of America) record for lead Texas ARCA 500k at Texas World Speedway on Sunday. The race set changes on a superspeedway. Aggies can't ride out Tulsa storm From Staff and Wire Reports TULSA, Okla. —Last Tuesday Texas A&M head football coach R. C. Slocum told reporters that upsets were the na ture of college football. That if a team wasn't prepared and ready to play, any team could defeat any other team on any given day. "There will be some teams like A&M that will lose to TuIsas this week end. And hopefully that's not us," Slocum explained almost a week ago. Last Saturday those words became prophecy. Tulsa senior quarterback T.J. Rub- ley threw a 63-yard touchdown pass to Chris Penn with 2:47 left and the big- play running of Chris Hughley carried Tulsa to a stunning 35-34 victory over No. 15 Texas A&M Saturday. Billy Cole recovered a fumble on the ensuing kickoff and Hughley, who rushed for 231 yards, got Tulsa (3-1) a first down with a 4-yard run with a minute to go that allowed the Golden Hurricane to run out the clock. Jeff Granger threw four touch downs for the Aggies (1-1), but lie played like a redshirt freshman in the second half, throwing two intercep tions and fumbling a snap for an 11- yard loss on a third-and-1. The Aggiesled 28-10 at halftime be fore Tulsa scored three touchdowns in a span of 6:16 in the third quarter to take a 29-28 lead. Granger fumbled on the first play of the half and Hughley scored from the 10 on the next play. A&M had four turnovers on the day. "We did everything we could to make it turn out like it did," Slocum said of the Aggie mistakes. "Once See Tulsa/ Page 8 ‘Engineering Majors Come Join Zls at an Intel Open Mouse Date: Wednesday, September 25, 1991 Time: 6:00pm - 8:15pm Place: Rudder Conference Room 402 Refreshments Provided Learn more about: • Positions Available for Spring ’92 Graduates • Co-op/Summer Opportunities Available • Intel Culture and Work Environment Interview schedules will occur on Thursday, September 26. See your Placement Office for more details. “E intel. The Computer Inside.'" Test Your Knowledge! Who Is This Man? A. Rode across Asia on a tricycle. B. First magician to successfully saw a woman in half. C. Winner of 1886 Ulysses S. Grant look-alike contest. D. Developed rotary dial telephone and automatic switchboard. I f you answered “D," move to the head of the class! Because the man pictured above is Lars Magnus Ericsson, who was working the kinks out of the telephone in Sweden at the same time Alexander Graham Bell was developing the telephone in the U.S. Ericsson went on to found one of the world's largest telecommunications companies, Ericsson Network Systems, now with offices in over 70 countries worldwide. If you’re about to graduate with a technical degree in Computer Science, Electrical Engineering, Telecommunications or a related field, you owe it to yourself to explore a career with Ericsson. We can offer you a world of challenge and international prestige. A world that lets you be a real part of Ericsson’s success. Find out more: Texas A&M October 7 Computer Science and Electrical Engineering If you're unable to meet with us on campus, please write for more information: Dept. ColAdv, Ericsson Network Systems Inc., P.O. Box 833875, Richardson, TX 75083-3875. If you're looking for the place to build your career, Ericsson is the answer. ERICSSON Network Systems Inc. An Equal Opportunity Employer Texas Instruments Fair Wednesday, September 25, 1991 Texas A&M Rudder Conference Center Room 701 Interviews Scheduled Please bring your resume and a copy of your transcript or a list of courses. TALK TO TTS MAJOR PRODUCT & SERVICE GROUPS. TI’s technical managers and recruiters want to see you. They want to tell you about the job opportunities in the many technologies which make Texas Instruments a leader in electronics. That’s why TI is having a Job Fair on the Texas A